Chipmaking firm NVIDIA posted its Q4 earnings on Wednesday, showing a record revenue again of $68.1 billion.
Again, the majority of revenue for the quarter came from its data center segment. While the company’s stock closed at a price of $195.62, up by 1.44%, after-hours trading indicates the stock has climbed above the $200 mark.
The update comes after AMD—a key competitor to NVIDIA that sells the same products and services as it does—posted Q4 earnings that received a lukewarm response and a 15% dip in its stock price.

Source: Google Finance
“Computing demand is growing exponentially — the agentic AI inflection point has arrived. Grace Blackwell with NVLink is the king of inference today — delivering an order-of-magnitude lower cost per token — and Vera Rubin will extend that leadership even further,” said CEO Jensen Huang.
“Enterprise adoption of agents is skyrocketing. Our customers are racing to invest in AI compute — the factories powering the AI industrial revolution and their future growth,” he also said.
The report indicates that AI-related demand continues to surge, especially for companies that are able to capitalize with industry leading products and premium pricing.
Annual revenue for 2025 was $215.9 billion, up by 65% on a year-on-year basis. Q4 revenue was $68.1 billion, up by 20% from Q3 revenues of $57 billion. Data center revenue took a huge chunk of top-line earnings at $62.3 billion. Revenues from gaming and PC products, professional visualization, and its automotive and robotics division were $3.7 billion, $1.3 billion, and $604 million.
NVIDIA’s GAAP gross margins for Q4 and 2025 were recorded at 75% and 71.1%, respectively.


